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What Is Fermentation and Why Do I Go On About It So Much?

fermented vegetables

Eat the (fermented) rainbow

If you have read my blog at all, at some point, you may have had one of the following thoughts:

  1. Fermentation sounds revolting. Why does she keep going on about it?
  2. OMG. I love fermentation. I named my sourdough starter [insert name]. On [insert date] she turns [insert number] years old. We will throw her a party.
  3. I would like to try fermentation but I fear I will accidentally poison and kill my family.

I am convinced that many people who want to reduce their waste will eventually stumble onto fermentation. Few bulk stores carry vinegar after all. How will you get the stuff? (Click here for a recipe for scrap vinegar.) Thank fermentation for apple cider vinegar—and much, much more.

Fermented food tastes delicious

If for no other reason, eat fermented foods for the taste. When mixed together, flour and water will bubble into a yeasty starter for baking mouth-watering sourdough bread. Combine water with raw honey, tend to it minimally and it will transform into delicious mead with a decent alcohol content.

You have no doubt eaten plenty of fermented foods. All sorts of foods undergo the process at some point in their preparation: sourdough bread, kimchi, kombucha, real dill pickles, pickled peppers, preserved lemonssour cream, cheese, beer, ginger beer, wine, vinegar, coffee, tea, chocolate and on and on.

I find the process of fermentation fascinating. I’m obsessed with it and wish I had discovered it earlier in my adult life (better late than never). I can’t be too hard on myself though. Only within a few generations have we nearly abandoned our food-preparing skills, including this ancient method.

Other benefits of fermentation:

(Read more about the benefits of fermentation here and here.)

But what exactly is fermentation?

fermentation

noun     fer·men·ta·tion     \ˌfər-mən-ˈtā-shən, –ˌmen-\

“[The] process by which microbes consume sugars and produce acid, alcohol and gases.” — from The Good Gut

“The transformative action of microorganisms.” — from The Art of Fermentation

Controlled rot: fermentation predigests food, acting like an exterior stomach

Controlled rot, an exterior stomach, all this talk of bacteria and microbes… Anne Marie, you may be thinking, it sounds gross! You did catch the part about chocolate requiring fermentation for its production, right?

How does fermentation work?

Submerge some salted and chopped cabbage in liquid and after a few days, you have tangy sauerkraut. How does that transformation happen seemingly like magic?

Vegetables are covered in anaerobic, lactic-acid bacteria. When you submerge the chopped cabbage in liquid, these bacteria eat the sugars in the cabbage, reproduce and produce lactic acid, which ferments—and preserves—the food. These acids not only give sauerkraut its tangy, delicious flavor, they also inhibit the growth of bad bacteria in the sauerkraut. As a result, fermentation is very safe. Bad bacteria cannot survive in acidic fermented foods.

Where should I start?

Many fermentation enthusiasts consider sauerkraut the gateway ferment. Find the recipe for that here. Kimchi requires one more step, so you could try that next. The only real trick to making delicious kimchi is finding the spice—gochugaru. Maybe next, start a ginger bug or a sourdough starter—or both!

You can find many recipes for fermented foods in my recipe index. I would suggest starting with “Vegetables, fermented,” followed by “Fruit, fermented” and “Bread and sourdough.” I also have recipes for yogurt, sour cream and other cultured dairy under “Cheesemaking.”

Happy fermenting!

Kombucha, ginger beer and natural soda
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